Sociology Colloquium Series - Stefanie DeLuca
Join us for the UB Colloquium Series talk featuring Dr. Stefanie DeLuca (Johns Hopkins University). More details forthcoming!
Join us for the UB Colloquium Series talk featuring Dr. Stefanie DeLuca (Johns Hopkins University). More details forthcoming!
Stefanie DeLuca, James S. Coleman Professor of Sociology & Social Policy, Department of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University will present this talk as part of the 2024 Spring IRP Seminar Series.
Stefanie DeLuca will give a dinner talk at NBER's Behavioral Economics Bootcamp.
For more information, click here: https://www.nber.org/conferences/behavioral-public-economics-bootcamp-f…
May 26, 11:35-12:35am, Paris School of Economics
48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, room R2-21 (2nd floor)
Invited Speaker: Stefanie DeLuca
Creating moves to opportunity: experimental evidence on barriers to neighborhood choice
The New Demography of Migration and Mobility
May 4, 4:00-5:15pm, Location TBA
Keynote Address by Stefanie DeLuca
Residential Mobility, Housing Insecurity, and Neighborhood Opportunity: What We Can Learn From Qualitative Methods and Policy Experiments
Stefanie DeLuca was an invited speaker at the Family and Education Workshop in San Juan, PR.
Stefanie DeLuca and Elizabeth Burland have been invited to give a talk on education policy, and how students make decisions about postsecondary education.
The talk will take place on February 16th from 12-1pm at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, at the University of Michigan.
Stefanie DeLuca has been invited to present at the Economic Research Series Seminar at Swansea University in Wales, UK and discuss her recent NBER paper, "'When Anything Can Happen': Anticipated Adversity and Postsecondary Decision-Making."
The seminar will be held virtually on March 17, 2022.
The National Association of Realtors hosted a Policy Forum at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. on February 6, 2020 bringing together hundreds of industry stakeholders, policymakers, and academic experts in DC to discuss housing affordability concerns in communities across the country.
Panelists at the Forum covered various topics, including the Supply of Affordable Housing, Racial Homeownership Gap, Access To Credit, Tax Incentives for Affordable Housing and Homeownership.